A Manhattan woman has filed a $1 million lawsuit against her former roommate after finding porn on his computer – of her.

In papers filed in Manhattan Supreme Court, Claudia Pak says she found 26 video files on roommate John Tom’s computer showing her “in various states of undress and engaged in activities of a highly personal nature” that he’d filmed using a hidden camera.

The peeping Tom “purposely lured Ms. Pak to the premises in order to secretly film and view her . . . and to repeatedly view such video clips for his personal satisfaction,” says the suit, which seeks money damages for Pak’s “extreme mental anguish, distress, inconvenience and humiliation.”

Tom, 38, and his lawyer did not return calls for comment.

Tom was arrested and charged with unlawful surveillance after Pak reported her disturbing find to police.

Pak’s suit says she first met the purported perv in March of last year. After learning she was looking for an apartment in the city, Tom told her “that he lived in a two-bedroom cooperative apartment in downtown Manhattan owned by him and his brother,” and that she could rent their spare bedroom.

She agreed, and moved in this past December.

On Jan. 6, Tom “installed what he explained to Ms. Pak was an air-cleaning unit” in her room, the suit says.

On Jan. 18, she said she “noticed an unusual mechanism inside the air-cleaning unit, which she discovered to be a hidden camera.”

She then found the video files on the computer – one of which had been created earlier that day, the suit says.

The files also revealed that the scheming sicko had tested the equipment on himself, the suit says.

“One video filed consisted of footage of [Tom] in Ms. Pak’s bedroom strategically adjusting the camera to capture all of [her] activities,” and showed Tom “posing partially nude in what is believed to be his attempt to imitate a nude and unsuspecting Ms. Pak in her bedroom and making sure the camera captured clear footage,” the suit says.

“Shocked, humiliated and in fear of her personal safety, Ms. Pak immediately left the premises” and contacted cops, the suit says. Before he was arrested, Tom “sent text messages” to her cellphone “acknowledging his guilt,” the suit says.